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Book Title
The American City : What Works, What Doesn't
ISBN
9780071373678

Informazioni su questo prodotto

Product Identifiers

Publisher
McGraw-Hill Professional Publishing
ISBN-10
0071373675
ISBN-13
9780071373678
eBay Product ID (ePID)
2261340

Product Key Features

Number of Pages
560 Pages
Language
English
Publication Name
American City : What Works, What Doesn't
Publication Year
2002
Subject
Design, Drafting, Drawing & Presentation, Public Policy / City Planning & Urban Development
Features
Revised
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Political Science, Architecture
Author
Alexander Garvin
Format
Hardcover

Dimensions

Item Height
1.6 in
Item Weight
66.1 Oz
Item Length
11.4 in
Item Width
8.8 in

Additional Product Features

Edition Number
2
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
LCCN
2002-026345
TitleLeading
The
Reviews
The 1st edition of this work was published in 1995 and very quickly became a classic in the field of urban studies and was adopted as a textbook in many universities for courses in urban planning and related fields. It is not surprising that this new edition was eagerly anticipated. The author, a Yale Professor for Urban Planning and Management for over 35 years, in addition to being a practicing architect and real estate developer, attempted to discover what makes for successful urban planning by examining some 300 programs and projects in cities across the country. He focused on what he terms "the six ingredients of project success" -- market, location, design, financing, entrepreneurship, and time. Unlike previous works in the field, this volume addresses planning from a multidisciplinary approach including architectural, political, sociological, and economical aspects. Each of the 18 chapters describes various projects and demonstrates how the six ingredients affect the success or failure of planning in specific areas: for example, housing rehabilitation, revitalizing neighborhoods, land use regulation, and preserving the past. Some of the projects described in the 1st edition are updated, as is all of the statistical information. Sections on some newer areas of concern -- entertainment centers, stadiums, environmental issues, and loft housing -- are also added. The table of contents presents an outline of the information in each chapter, making it fairly easy to find subtopics of a particular area; however, the index makes it possible to find specific projects and more detailed information. The text is enhanced by the inclusion of well-chosen black-and-white photographs, some showing before and after views of urban, and occasionally suburban, development. Although the book will probably be used most often by students and professionals in some aspect of urban planning, the easy-to-read style, interesting content, and photographs will make it appreciated by others who are interested in making the future of their own environments more beautiful and practically livable. Both academic and public libraries should find this a useful addition to their collection., By R.A. Beauregard, New School UniversitySince the late 19th century, Americans have endeavored to tame the country's cities. Numerous initiatives have been directed at assuring economic viability, enhancing urban form and function, and generally making cities healthy, socially attractive, and desirable to investors. In the second edition (1st ed., CH, May '96) of this compilation of more than 250 projects in over 100 cities, Garvin (professional urban planner and adjunct professor, urban planning and management, Yale Univ.) asses the strategies used in the last half-century to improve the physical city. Thirteen core chapters review efforts from parks and playgrounds to housing schemes, pedestrian-friendly streets, cultural centers, neighborhood revitalization, and residential suburbs. Replete with illustrations, these chapters also introduce a variety of policy tools; business improvement districts, home mortgage guarantees, and tax abatements among others. Additionally, Garvin provides separate chapters on land use regulations, comprehensive planning, and historic preservation. The book culminates with a list of six ingredients for project success market demand, location, design, financing, entrepreneurship, and timing and a call for strategic public actions that generate a positive private market response and sustainable projects. No other book offers such a comprehensive and practical overview of urban reinvestment initiatives. Highly recommended for collections supporting upper-division undergraduate students through professionals and two-year technical program students., Book reference excerpted from cover story"Whether such redevelopment requires federal subsidies is not at all clear," writes Alexander Garvin inThe American City: What Works, What Doesn't. Garvin should know: He's the city's chief planner at Ground Zero., By R.A. Beauregard, New School UniversitySince the late 19th century, Americans have endeavored to tame the country's cities. Numerous initiatives have been directed at assuring economic viability, enhancing urban form and function, and generally making cities healthy, socially attractive, and desirable to investors. In the second edition (1st ed., CH, May '96) of this compilation of more than 250 projects in over 100 cities, Garvin (professional urban planner and adjunct professor, urban planning and management, Yale Univ.) asses the strategies used in the last half-century to improve the physical city. Thirteen core chapters review efforts from parks and playgrounds to housing schemes, pedestrian-friendly streets, cultural centers, neighborhood revitalization, and residential suburbs. Replete with illustrations, these chapters also introduce a variety of policy tools; business improvement districts, home mortgage guarantees, and tax abatements among others. Additionally, Garvin provides separate chapters on land use regulations, comprehensive planning, and historic preservation. The book culminates with a list of six ingredients for project success - market demand, location, design, financing, entrepreneurship, and timing - and a call for strategic public actions that generate a positive private market response and sustainable projects. No other book offers such a comprehensive and practical overview of urban reinvestment initiatives. Highly recommended for collections supporting upper-division undergraduate students through professionals and two-year technical program students., Book reference excerpted from cover story "Whether such redevelopment requires federal subsidies is not at all clear," writes Alexander Garvin inThe American City: What Works, What Doesn't. Garvin should know: He's the city's chief planner at Ground Zero., By R.A. Beauregard, New School University Since the late 19th century, Americans have endeavored to tame the country's cities. Numerous initiatives have been directed at assuring economic viability, enhancing urban form and function, and generally making cities healthy, socially attractive, and desirable to investors. In the second edition (1st ed., CH, May '96) of this compilation of more than 250 projects in over 100 cities, Garvin (professional urban planner and adjunct professor, urban planning and management, Yale Univ.) asses the strategies used in the last half-century to improve the physical city. Thirteen core chapters review efforts from parks and playgrounds to housing schemes, pedestrian-friendly streets, cultural centers, neighborhood revitalization, and residential suburbs. Replete with illustrations, these chapters also introduce a variety of policy tools; business improvement districts, home mortgage guarantees, and tax abatements among others. Additionally, Garvin provides separate chapters on land use regulations, comprehensive planning, and historic preservation. The book culminates with a list of six ingredients for project success market demand, location, design, financing, entrepreneurship, and timing and a call for strategic public actions that generate a positive private market response and sustainable projects. No other book offers such a comprehensive and practical overview of urban reinvestment initiatives. Highly recommended for collections supporting upper-division undergraduate students through professionals and two-year technical program students., In February, when urban planner and veteran City Hall insider Alexander Garvin was tapped to oversee the rebuilding of lower Manhattan, all the local papers hit the same historical note."Not since Robert Moses imposed his single-minded mark on the region decades ago,"theDaily Newswrote,"has an individual been asked to lead the re-creation of such a crucial swath of real estate."Ah, the ghost of New York's "master builder." There's no purging him, is there? Even as clean-up workers were still unearthing human remains from Ground Zero, pressure was building on Garvin to hurry up and deliver a master reconstruction plan in a New York minute -- long-term consequences be damned.This month, just as Garvin plunges forward with a design that will remake Manhattan on a Moses-like scale, McGraw-Hill is reissuing a newly updated version of his critically acclaimed 1995 book,The American City: What Works, What Doesn't.If Garvin's blueprint for a revitalized downtown reflects the urban philosophy he's sketched out in his book, New Yorkers need not fret the second coming of Robert Moses.Garvin's credo is straightforward:"Only when a project also has a beneficial impact on the surrounding community can it be considered successful planning.For him, there is no singular, shining model of urban planning that can be carbon-copied; a particular region, city, or neighborhood has its own distinct features and assets that need to be capitalized on by a given project.Encyclopedic in scale,The American Cityis a sweeping survey of more than 250 urban and suburban revitalization projects in America. To fine-tune his recipe for a successful formula, Garvin casts his eye over the last hundred years. He cites Chicago's creation of a lakeshore network of parks in the early 1900s -- which spurred a residential housing boom -- as one successful example. Historic preservation, as it was pioneered by Charleston and New Orleans in the mid-20th Century, is another kind.Portland's recent rebirth also embodies, to Garvin, another successful model -- and on a much larger and fuller scale. After the city invested in a riverfront park, mass transit (a light-rail system), and walkable streets, the business community responded in kind, resulting in a boomlet of retail stores, office buildings, hotels, and apartment houses."Thus,"Garvin concludes,"urban planning should be defined as public action that will produce a sustained and widespread private market reaction."In particular, he indicts Moses' brand of redevelopment as producing the opposite effect, because many of his colossal structures -- such as the recently razed New York Coliseum and the superblock housing projects -- resulted in a form of de facto segregation, in which residents in the area were effectively cut off from their neighbors."This separation,"Garvin writes, prevents any redevelopment benefits from"spilling over into surrounding neighborhoods and thus stimulating further private activity."A well-respected professor of planning and architecture at Yale University, Garvin's ethos is part Frederick Law Olmsted, part Jane Jacobs: he's passionate about parks and open space but he's also an ardent proponent of mixed-use, pedestrian-oriented neighborhoods. The dapper academic, who favors bowties, is also no ivory-tower theorist; he's been a member of the New York City Planning Commission for the last seven years, and from 1970 to 1980, he served in city government as deputy commissioner of housing and director of comprehensive planning. Perhaps most importantly, nothing in Garvin's book or career suggests he is about to turn into a 21st century public works despot a la Moses., Book reference excerpted from cover story "Whether such redevelopment requires federal subsidies is not at all clear," writes Alexander Garvin in The American City: What Works, What Doesn't. Garvin should know: He's the city's chief planner at Ground Zero., By R.A. Beauregard, New School University Since the late 19th century, Americans have endeavored to tame the country's cities. Numerous initiatives have been directed at assuring economic viability, enhancing urban form and function, and generally making cities healthy, socially attractive, and desirable to investors. In the second edition (1st ed., CH, May '96) of this compilation of more than 250 projects in over 100 cities, Garvin (professional urban planner and adjunct professor, urban planning and management, Yale Univ.) asses the strategies used in the last half-century to improve the physical city. Thirteen core chapters review efforts from parks and playgrounds to housing schemes, pedestrian-friendly streets, cultural centers, neighborhood revitalization, and residential suburbs. Replete with illustrations, these chapters also introduce a variety of policy tools; business improvement districts, home mortgage guarantees, and tax abatements among others. Additionally, Garvin provides separate chapters on land use regulations, comprehensive planning, and historic preservation. The book culminates with a list of six ingredients for project success - market demand, location, design, financing, entrepreneurship, and timing - and a call for strategic public actions that generate a positive private market response and sustainable projects. No other book offers such a comprehensive and practical overview of urban reinvestment initiatives. Highly recommended for collections supporting upper-division undergraduate students through professionals and two-year technical program students., By R.A. Beauregard, New School University Since the late 19th century, Americans have endeavored to tame the countrye(tm)s cities. Numerous initiatives have been directed at assuring economic viability, enhancing urban form and function, and generally making cities healthy, socially attractive, and desirable to investors. In the second edition (1st ed., CH, May e(tm)96) of this compilation of more than 250 projects in over 100 cities, Garvin (professional urban planner and adjunct professor, urban planning and management, Yale Univ.) asses the strategies used in the last half-century to improve the physical city. Thirteen core chapters review efforts from parks and playgrounds to housing schemes, pedestrian-friendly streets, cultural centers, neighborhood revitalization, and residential suburbs. Replete with illustrations, these chapters also introduce a variety of policy tools; business improvement districts, home mortgage guarantees, and tax abatements among others. Additionally, Garvin provides separate chapters on land use regulations, comprehensive planning, and historic preservation. The book culminates with a list of six ingredients for project success e" market demand, location, design, financing, entrepreneurship, and timing e" and a call for strategic public actions that generate a positive private market response and sustainable projects. No other book offers such a comprehensive and practical overview of urban reinvestment initiatives. Highly recommended for collections supporting upper-division undergraduate students through professionals and two-year technical program students., Book reference excerpted from cover story "Whether such redevelopment requires federal subsidies is not at all clear," writes Alexander Garvin in The American City: What Works, What Doesn't . Garvin should know: He's the city's chief planner at Ground Zero., In February, when urban planner and veteran City Hall insider Alexander Garvin was tapped to oversee the rebuilding of lower Manhattan, all the local papers hit the same historical note. "Not since Robert Moses imposed his single-minded mark on the region decades ago," the Daily News wrote, "has an individual been asked to lead the re-creation of such a crucial swath of real estate." Ah, the ghost of New York's "master builder." There's no purging him, is there? Even as clean-up workers were still unearthing human remains from Ground Zero, pressure was building on Garvin to hurry up and deliver a master reconstruction plan in a New York minute -- long-term consequences be damned. This month, just as Garvin plunges forward with a design that will remake Manhattan on a Moses-like scale, McGraw-Hill is reissuing a newly updated version of his critically acclaimed 1995 book, The American City: What Works, What Doesn't. If Garvin's blueprint for a revitalized downtown reflects the urban philosophy he's sketched out in his book, New Yorkers need not fret the second coming of Robert Moses. Garvin's credo is straightforward: "Only when a project also has a beneficial impact on the surrounding community can it be considered successful planning. For him, there is no singular, shining model of urban planning that can be carbon-copied; a particular region, city, or neighborhood has its own distinct features and assets that need to be capitalized on by a given project. Encyclopedic in scale, The American City is a sweeping survey of more than 250 urban and suburban revitalization projects in America. To fine-tune his recipe for a successful formula, Garvin casts his eye over the last hundred years. He cites Chicago's creation of a lakeshore network of parks in the early 1900s -- which spurred a residential housing boom -- as one successful example. Historic preservation, as it was pioneered by Charleston and New Orleans in the mid-20th Century, is another kind. Portland's recent rebirth also embodies, to Garvin, another successful model -- and on a much larger and fuller scale. After the city invested in a riverfront park, mass transit (a light-rail system), and walkable streets, the business community responded in kind, resulting in a boomlet of retail stores, office buildings, hotels, and apartment houses. "Thus," Garvin concludes, "urban planning should be defined as public action that will produce a sustained and widespread private market reaction." In particular, he indicts Moses' brand of redevelopment as producing the opposite effect, because many of his colossal structures -- such as the recently razed New York Coliseum and the superblock housing projects -- resulted in a form of de facto segregation, in which residents in the area were effectively cut off from their neighbors. "This separation," Garvin writes, prevents any redevelopment benefits from "spilling over into surrounding neighborhoods and thus stimulating further private activity." A well-respected professor of planning and architecture at Yale University, Garvin's ethos is part Frederick Law Olmsted, part Jane Jacobs: he's passionate about parks and open space but he's also an ardent proponent of mixed-use, pedestrian-oriented neighborhoods. The dapper academic, who favors bowties, is also no ivory-tower theorist; he's been a member of the New York City Planning Commission for the last seven years, and from 1970 to 1980, he served in city government as deputy commissioner of housing and director of comprehensive planning. Perhaps most importantly, nothing in Garvin's book or career suggests he is about to turn into a 21st century public works despot a la Moses., The 1st edition of this work was published in 1995 and very quickly became a classic in the field of urban studies and was adopted as a textbook in many universities for courses in urban planning and related fields. It is not surprising that this new edition was eagerly anticipated. The author, a Yale Professor for Urban Planning and Management for over 35 years, in addition to being a practicing architect and real estate developer, attempted to discover what makes for successful urban planning by examining some 300 programs and projects in cities across the country. He focused on what he terms "the six ingredients of project success" -- market, location, design, financing, entrepreneurship, and time. Unlike previous works in the field, this volume addresses planning from a multidisciplinary approach including architectural, political, sociological, and economical aspects.Each of the 18 chapters describes various projects and demonstrates how the six ingredients affect the success or failure of planning in specific areas: for example, housing rehabilitation, revitalizing neighborhoods, land use regulation, and preserving the past. Some of the projects described in the 1st edition are updated, as is all of the statistical information. Sections on some newer areas of concern -- entertainment centers, stadiums, environmental issues, and loft housing -- are also added. The table of contents presents an outline of the information in each chapter, making it fairly easy to find subtopics of a particular area; however, the index makes it possible to find specific projects and more detailed information. The text is enhanced by the inclusion of well-chosen black-and-white photographs, some showing before and after views of urban, and occasionally suburban, development.Although the book will probably be used most often by students and professionals in some aspect of urban planning, the easy-to-read style, interesting content, and photographs will make it appreciated by others who are interested in making the future of their own environments more beautiful and practically livable. Both academic and public libraries should find this a useful addition to their collection., In February, when urban planner and veteran City Hall insider Alexander Garvin was tapped to oversee the rebuilding of lower Manhattan, all the local papers hit the same historical note. "Not since Robert Moses imposed his single-minded mark on the region decades ago," the Daily News wrote, "has an individual been asked to lead the re-creation of such a crucial swath of real estate."Ah, the ghost of New York's "master builder." There's no purging him, is there? Even as clean-up workers were still unearthing human remains from Ground Zero, pressure was building on Garvin to hurry up and deliver a master reconstruction plan in a New York minute -- long-term consequences be damned.This month, just as Garvin plunges forward with a design that will remake Manhattan on a Moses-like scale, McGraw-Hill is reissuing a newly updated version of his critically acclaimed 1995 book, The American City: What Works, What Doesn't. If Garvin's blueprint for a revitalized downtown reflects the urban philosophy he's sketched out in his book, New Yorkers need not fret the second coming of Robert Moses.Garvin's credo is straightforward: "Only when a project also has a beneficial impact on the surrounding community can it be considered successful planning. For him, there is no singular, shining model of urban planning that can be carbon-copied; a particular region, city, or neighborhood has its own distinct features and assets that need to be capitalized on by a given project.Encyclopedic in scale, The American City is a sweeping survey of more than 250 urban and suburban revitalization projects in America. To fine-tune his recipe for a successful formula, Garvin casts his eye over the last hundred years. He cites Chicago's creation of a lakeshore network of parks in the early 1900s -- which spurred a residential housing boom -- as one successful example. Historic preservation, as it was pioneered by Charleston and New Orleans in the mid-20th Century, is another kind.Portland's recent rebirth also embodies, to Garvin, another successful model -- and on a much larger and fuller scale. After the city invested in a riverfront park, mass transit (a light-rail system), and walkable streets, the business community responded in kind, resulting in a boomlet of retail stores, office buildings, hotels, and apartment houses."Thus," Garvin concludes, "urban planning should be defined as public action that will produce a sustained and widespread private market reaction." In particular, he indicts Moses' brand of redevelopment as producing the opposite effect, because many of his colossal structures -- such as the recently razed New York Coliseum and the superblock housing projects -- resulted in a form of de facto segregation, in which residents in the area were effectively cut off from their neighbors. "This separation," Garvin writes, prevents any redevelopment benefits from "spilling over into surrounding neighborhoods and thus stimulating further private activity."A well-respected professor of planning and architecture at Yale University, Garvin's ethos is part Frederick Law Olmsted, part Jane Jacobs: he's passionate about parks and open space but he's also an ardent proponent of mixed-use, pedestrian-oriented neighborhoods. The dapper academic, who favors bowties, is also no ivory-tower theorist; he's been a member of the New York City Planning Commission for the last seven years, and from 1970 to 1980, he served in city government as deputy commissioner of housing and director of comprehensive planning. Perhaps most importantly, nothing in Garvin's book or career suggests he is about to turn into a 21st century public works despot a la Moses.
Dewey Edition
21
Illustrated
Yes
Dewey Decimal
711/.4/0973
Table Of Content
Preface to the First Edition Preface to the Second Edition Acknowledgments Chapter 1: A Realistic Approach to City and Suburban Planning Chapter 2: Ingredients of Success Chapter 3: Parks and Playgrounds Chapter 4: Palaces for the People Chapter 5: Retail Shopping Chapter 6: Urban Development Chapter 7: Planning for Pedestrians Chapter 8: Increasing the Housing Supply Chapter 9: Reducing Housing Cost Chapter 10: Housing Rehabilitation Chapter 11: Clearing the Slums Chapter 12: Revitalizing Neighborhoods Chapter 13: Residential Suburbs Chapter 14: New-Towns-in-Towns Chapter 15: New Towns-in-the-Country Chapter 16: Land Use Regulation Chapter 17: Preserving the Past Chapter 18: Comprehensive Planning Index
Edition Description
Revised edition
Synopsis
An approach to American urban planning and design based on analysis of programs and strategies of 250 U.S. projects., This comprehensive, multidisciplinary approach to urban planning and design in America analyzes key projects initiated in 250 U.S. urban areas and details which strategies and programs were successful and which failed. New to the Second Edition: * New sections on stadiums, entertainment centers, business improvement districts, tax credit housing * Checklists and tables for field use * A review of recent failures and successes This classic reference, fully revised for the new millennium, provides proven strategies for professionals and invaluable real-world insights for students., This standard refernce on urban planning and design in America analyzes the key projects initiated in major cities, suburban areas, and new towns - more than 250 in all - and clearly shows which strategies and programs work and which do not. The book ranges over all elements of urban life, from stadiums to parks, and its practical recommendations are tested by real-world implementation. Since the publication of the 1/e in 1995, much is new in the rapidly changing world of urban design. Significant new types of programs, such as Business Improvement Districts; national trends such as stadium construction and loft conversions; and exciting new completed projects are all covered here to make the book the definitive guide to planning in the new decade.
LC Classification Number
NA9105.G37 2002

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